Overview:• Anthony Mundine invited Charlie Teo (brain surgeon) to his rematch with Danny Green in Adelaide tonight, but the Australian Medical Association wants the boxing to be banned.

• Australian businesses aim for better care services, better public transport and stronger regulation on employees as part of Australia’s labour market solutions.

• Australian doctors are worried about patients with angina because of the national shortage of the vital drug used to treat it. The brand of drug used to treat it, Anginine, dilates arteries to increase blood flow to the heart during an attack.

News on Health Professional Radio. Today is the 3rd of February 2017. Read by Rebecca Foster. Health News

Anthony Mundine has invited renowned brain surgeon Charlie Teo to his rematch with Danny Green in Adelaide [tonight]… but the Australian Medical Association is unimpressed and is repeating a call for boxing to be banned.

It is understood the invitation was extended by Mundine’s agent, who told The Daily Telegraph he wanted the “best neurosurgeon in the country” at the Adelaide Oval bout.

Organisers of the much-hyped encounter said Dr Teo had been invited as a guest, not an on-duty doctor, and that he had accepted.

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) has called for boxing to be banned ahead of the fight, saying the evidence linking the sport to brain injury was conclusive.

Dr Teo is famous for performing radical brain surgery in cases that other surgeons consider inoperable.

But having a neurosurgeon at a boxing match would offer no protection for the fighters, AMA president Michael Gannon said.

He said doctors cannot support an activity in which acute brain injury is a potential outcome

Many Australians are working far more than that, putting their mental health at risk — but it’s up to stricter regulations on employers to turn the tables, Dr Stanford said.

However, there are some things workers can do to help themselves. Employees could start by educating themselves that spending half their lives at work isn’t “inevitable or natural or fair”, Dr Stanford said.

“When people live in a dog-eat-dog environment for long enough they start to think ‘yes, I should work 20 hours unpaid overtime a week to keep my job’,” he said.

Once people realised their conditions were unsustainable, they should begin talking to their colleagues, joining or starting a union and lobbying Government for change.

Just as important an issue as overwork is the problem of underwork — the large proportion of Australians who are working in part-time or casual jobs.

The obvious way for everyone to find balance would be to share the work more equitably, but this would require placing stronger regulations on working hours and scheduling.

The workplace isn’t the only place people need to share the load: Dr Stanford said there were also small- and large-scale solutions to the enduring inequity between the sexes when it came to household and caring tasks.